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Peer reviewedHalford, Joan Montgomery – Educational Leadership, 1999
Educating for belief or unbelief means educating for religious and spiritual literacy and examining religions from historical and philosophical perspectives. The First Amendment does not forbid teaching about religion as part of our cultural heritage. Spirituality requires no institutional affiliation. Sacred music and art should be restored to…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Curriculum Development, Definitions, Educational Environment
Peer reviewedOser, Fritz, Ed. – International Journal of Educational Research, 1997
The seven chapters of this theme issue examine how to create a moral context to stimulate moral development and how the system of self-interest in childhood and adolescence integrates the system of morality in ways that yield a high moral identity. Among issues considered are the moral climate of a school and child development. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Child Development, Children, Educational Environment
Peer reviewedJohnston, Bill; Juhasz, Andrea; Marken, James; Ruiz, Beverly Rolfs – Research in the Teaching of English, 1998
Studies the moral dimension of English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) teaching to adults. Analyzes examples of classroom interaction to reveal the moral substrate of the teacher's words and actions. Finds that various features of classroom routines and impromptu exchanges have profound moral significance. Suggests that the moral meanings present in…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewedLevine, Jodi H. – About Campus, 2001
Presents an interview with two faculty members at Temple University on the question of academic integrity. Discusses that while encouraging better detection and stiffer enforcement of policies is an understandable response to studies showing that cheating is in the rise, it is important to keep the dialogue focused on the value of integrity. (GCP)
Descriptors: Cheating, College Environment, College Faculty, College Students
Peer reviewedKuther, Tara L.; Higgins-D'Alessandro, Ann – Journal of Adolescence, 2000
Assesses relations among moral reasoning, domain judgment and engagement in risky behaviors among high school students (N=190). Risky behaviors were perceived as personal decisions, rather than as ones of morality. Engagement and domain judgment of risky behavior interacted; with increasing substance involvement, students were more likely to view…
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Adolescent Behavior, Adolescents, Behavior Patterns
Peer reviewedBauer, Dale M. – College English, 1990
Looks at student resistances to feminist discussions and agendas in the classroom, or more generally, to a collective moral and ethical rhetoric. Considers how instructors can move their students beyond the public/private split that forms the basis of their resistance. Views the classroom as a place to examine resistances and identifications. (TB)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Ethics, Feminism, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBersoff, Donald N. – Counseling Psychologist, 1996
Presents arguments against adopting virtue ethics as a guiding concept in developing counseling guidelines: (1) virtue ethics is irrelevant in the resolution of most ethics cases; (2) virtue and principle ethics overlap; (3) principle ethics are more suited to acting and deciding; (4) the emphasis on virtue ethics increases the possibility of…
Descriptors: Codes of Ethics, Counseling, Decision Making, Ethics
Peer reviewedBlunden, Ralph – Higher Education Research and Development, 1996
Five areas of academic loyalty in higher education are examined: to discipline; to students; to colleagues; to institution; to society. Traditional moral approaches are assessed for effectiveness as a framework for resolving academic conflicts of interest and responsibility. It is suggested that the ethical foundations of academic codes of conduct…
Descriptors: Codes of Ethics, College Faculty, College Role, Conflict Resolution
Peer reviewedWeiner, Myron – International Migration Review, 1996
Examines the debate as to whether migration is a basic human right or whether the claims of outsiders are superseded by the principle of national sovereignty and the moral obligation of the state to do the best for its own citizens. Neither approach provides a clear answer. (SLD)
Descriptors: Civil Liberties, Ethics, Government Role, Immigration
Peer reviewedLamme, Linda Leonard – Journal for a Just and Caring Education, 1996
Teachers who share children's literature with their classes in content areas also provide a rich curriculum in moral and ethical education. Embedded are values that promote democratic living and enhance children's moral education. This article discusses the ethics in fictional and biographical children's literature and offers strategies for…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Democratic Values, Elementary Education, Ethical Instruction
Beck, Lynn G. – School Administrator, 1996
Educational leaders must reexamine the ethical dimensions of their profession to confront complex moral challenges associated with changing school demographics (increasing poverty and ethnic diversity), inequitable conditions, administrative decision-making clout, and crumbling social institutions. Superintendents must be moral leaders who embody…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education, Ethics
Peer reviewedWrightson, Katherine M. – Innovative Higher Education, 1998
The University of Chicago (Illinois) has long emphasized teaching as a valued skill, fostering an image focused on the intellectual search for truth and transmission of intellectual values, a stand in opposition to popular relativist theories. Through the writings of Allan Bloom, Wayne Booth, and historical university documents, this model of…
Descriptors: College Environment, College Faculty, College Instruction, Educational History
Peer reviewedKlaassen, Cees A. – Teaching and Teacher Education, 2002
Examines Dutch teachers' views of their teaching responsibilities. Data from interviews with elementary and secondary teachers indicate that many teachers are fearful of moral issues that can arise in their classes, and they avoid situations in which they must settle disputes, handle inappropriate behavior, settle moral dilemmas, and judge what…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Ethics, Foreign Countries, Moral Values
Peer reviewedTrudeau, Sr. Christina Marie – Montessori Life, 2002
Discusses the influence of Hindu, Moslem, and Buddhist metaphysics on Maria Montessori's own pedagogical philosophy of Cosmic Education, which she regarded as the core of all learning experiences, after her visit to India. Considers the relationship between Montessori's ideas of child development and Cosmic Education, and the effect of Indian…
Descriptors: Child Development, Curriculum Development, Early Childhood Education, Ethical Instruction
Peer reviewedPeppas, Spero C.; Diskin, Barry A. – International Journal of Educational Management, 2001
Compared attitudes of business students who had taken a course in ethics with those who had not. Found no significant differences in the ethical values of the two groups. (EV)
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Ethical Instruction


